The city will release a list of the city’s most dangerous schools early next month, Mayor Bloomberg said yesterday.

“We’re going to focus on that and try to send a message to everyone else – that kind of behavior that’s been going on is not going to be tolerated. Period. End of story,” the mayor said during a news conference in The Bronx.

Bloomberg spoke the day after announcing a plan to crack down on school violence.

Bloomberg said that he expects to identify “roughly 10” schools that have high incidents of violence by the first week of January.

“People have rights, but the people that want to learn have rights, too,” he said.

“For too long, we have pushed the [rights of the] majority of the people who want to learn . . . to the side, and I think there is a way to take care of the disruptive kids and give them what the courts order – but they’re not going to be allowed to ruin it for everybody else.”

Bloomberg also said he or a deputy mayor would attend weekly meetings to check on the progress of those schools.

“You can think of it as the Compstat kind of meeting,” he said, referring to the program the NYPD uses to fight crime by focusing on quality-of-life issues.

“Every week, I get a report in terms of how everybody is cooperating . . . so that we have the numbers and we know how we’re progressing.”

Earlier this week, Bloomberg instituted a new “three strikes and you’re out” policy – students suspended three times within two years will be placed in another school.